Loch Gair Hydro-Electric Scheme
Loch Gair Hydro-Electric Scheme is a small-scale hydro-electric power station, built by the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board and commissioned in 1956. It is located near Lochgair, a hamlet to the north-east of Lochgilphead, Argyll and Bute in Scotland. It was originally designed to supply power to Lochgilphead and the surrounding communities, but is now connected to the National Grid.
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410 m
Lochgair
Lochgair (Scottish Gaelic: An Loch Geàrr) is a village in Argyll and Bute, Scotland. It lies on the coast of Loch Gair, a small inlet on the west of Loch Fyne. The A83 road runs through the village.
1.2 km
Asknish
Asknish (Scottish Gaelic: Aisginis; from the Norse meaning "ashtree headland" ) is a settlement near the village of Lochgair in Argyll and Bute, Scotland.
The hamlet is made up of a large detached house (Asknish House) and farm buildings with a lodge and two other dwellings nearby on the A83 road. Asknish House was built in the late 18th century and was named "Lochgair" or "Lochgair Mansion House" until the late 19th century. It has been a Category B listed building since 1971.
Asknish House is built on or near the site of a castle owned by the Campbells of Auchinbreck, who sold the estate in 1768 to Robert Campbell of Asknish (Robert Campbell being a descendant of the MacIvers of Lergachonzie & Asknish, and Asknish being the original name of the settlement near Kilmelford now known as Arduaine).
The house was inherited by Duncan Paterson (whose grandfather had married a sister of Robert Campbell), and later by Aylmer Vivian (who had married a niece of Duncan Paterson). Both the Patersons and Vivians adopted the surname MacIver Campbell on inheriting the estate. In 1897 Colonel Aylmer MacIver Campbell (i.e. Aylmer Vivian) sold the old MacIver Asknish estate near Kilmelford, requiring its new owner James Arthur Campbell to rename it (the new owner then coined the name Arduaine), and renamed the Lochgair mansion house Asknish.
5.1 km
Birdfield
Birdfield is a village in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, 7 miles (11 km) north-east of Lochgilphead.
5.5 km
Blackmill Loch
Blackmill Loch is an impounding reservoir, in Argyll and Bute, Scotland. The loch was constructed in 1964 and is one source of freshwater for the Lochgair Hydroelectric Scheme. The loch feeds the River Add, when not diverted for hydroelectric purposes. It is one of the two significant forest lochs to the north of Loch Glashan, the other being Loch Bealach Ghearran.
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